Note: the Classes are Only available in PHP5, the functions however work in both PHP4 and PHP5.
HTTP functies
Introductie
Met deze functies kun je de output die teruggezonden wordt naar de remote browser manipuleren op het HTTP protocol niveau.
Afhankelijkheden
Deze functies zijn beschikbaar als onderdeel van de standaard module die altijd beschikbaar is.
Installatie
Er zijn geen handelingen nodig m.b.t. tot installatie voor deze functies, deze maken deel uit van de kern van PHP.
Configuratie tijdens scriptuitvoer
Deze extensie gebruikt geen configuratie regels.
Resource types
Deze extensie maakt geen gebruik van resources.
Voorgedefinieerde constanten
Deze extensie definieert geen constanten.
Table of Contents
- http_cache_etag — Caching by ETag
- http_cache_last_modified — Caching by last modification
- http_chunked_decode — Decode chunked-encoded data
- http_deflate — Deflate data
- http_inflate — Inflate data
- http_get_request_body_stream — Get request body as stream
- http_get_request_body — Get request body as string
- http_get_request_headers — Get request headers as array
- http_date — Compose HTTP RFC compliant date
- http_support — Check built-in HTTP support
- http_match_etag — Match ETag
- http_match_modified — Match last modification
- http_match_request_header — Match any header
- http_build_cookie — Build cookie string
- http_negotiate_charset — Negotiate clients preferred character set
- http_negotiate_content_type — Negotiate clients preferred content type
- http_negotiate_language — Negotiate clients preferred language
- ob_deflatehandler — Deflate output handler
- ob_etaghandler — ETag output handler
- ob_inflatehandler — Inflate output handler
- http_parse_cookie — Parse HTTP cookie
- http_parse_headers — Parse HTTP headers
- http_parse_message — Parse HTTP messages
- http_parse_params — Parse parameter list
- http_persistent_handles_count — Stat persistent handles
- http_persistent_handles_ident — Get/set ident of persistent handles
- http_persistent_handles_clean — Clean up persistent handles
- http_get — Perform GET request
- http_head — Perform HEAD request
- http_post_data — Perform POST request with pre-encoded data
- http_post_fields — Perform POST request with data to be encoded
- http_put_data — Perform PUT request with data
- http_put_file — Perform PUT request with file
- http_put_stream — Perform PUT request with stream
- http_request_method_exists — Check whether request method exists
- http_request_method_name — Get request method name
- http_request_method_register — Register request method
- http_request_method_unregister — Unregister request method
- http_request — Perform custom request
- http_request_body_encode — Encode request body
- http_redirect — Issue HTTP redirect
- http_send_content_disposition — Send Content-Disposition
- http_send_content_type — Send Content-Type
- http_send_data — Send arbitrary data
- http_send_file — Send file
- http_send_last_modified — Send Last-Modified
- http_send_status — Send HTTP response status
- http_send_stream — Send stream
- http_throttle — HTTP throttling
- http_build_str — Build query string
- http_build_url — Build an URL
HTTP
alan at akbkhome dot com
11-Aug-2006 06:19
11-Aug-2006 06:19
henke dot andersson at comhem dot se
14-Jan-2006 10:01
14-Jan-2006 10:01
If you want to make outgoing http connections with php, concider the curl extension.
woei at xs4all dot nl
30-Nov-2005 04:57
30-Nov-2005 04:57
Actually, if you want to redirect a user why let HTML or JavaScript do it? Simply do this:
header("Location: http://www.example.com/");
WeeJames
07-Jul-2004 08:39
07-Jul-2004 08:39
Regarding what the guy before said. We've experienced problems where certain firewalls have encrypted the HTTP_REFERER meaning that it doesnt always contain the place you've come from.
Better to track where the user has come from either in a form post or in the url.
28-Apr-2004 04:05
in reference to toashwinisidhu's and breaker's note, a more effective way would be to use meta-tag redirect, for example.
<?php
$url = "http://somesite.com/index.php"; // target of the redirect
$delay = "3"; // 3 second delay
echo '<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="'.$delay.';url='.$url.'">';
?>
The meta goes in the head of the HTML.
This method does not require javascript and is supported by most browsers and is rarely, if ever, filterd out.
toashwinisidhu at yahoo dot com
21-Apr-2004 12:55
21-Apr-2004 12:55
The method given below may not sometimes work.
The following method has always worked with me:
just put the following 3 lines in your PHP code
?>
<body onload=setTimeout("location.href='$url'",$sec)>
<?PHP
-------?>
$sec is the time in second after which the browser would automatically go to the url. Set it to 0 if you do not want to give any time.
You can use this function on the events of various html/form objects (eg.-onclick for button).eg.
<input type=button value="Go to Php.net" onclick=setTimeout("location.href='php.net'",0)>
Use this to one step back
<input type="button" value="Back" onclick=history.go(-1)>
jeffp-php at outofservice dot com
05-Jan-2001 05:37
05-Jan-2001 05:37
$HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA --
You'll usually access variables from forms sent via POST method by just accessing the associated PHP global variable.
However, if your POST data is not URI encoded (i.e., custom application that's not form-based) PHP won't parse the data into nice variables for you. You will need to use $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA to access the raw data directly. (This should return a copy of the data given to the PHP process on STDIN; note that you wan't be able to open STDIN and read it yourself because PHP already did so itself.)
